- Rincon Center
Rincon Center is a complex comprised of shops, restaurants, offices and apartments in downtown San Francisco. The center takes up an entire block bounded by Mission, Howard, Spear and Steuart streets. There are two buildings.
Rincon Annex is the former post office building designed by
G.S. Underwood in the Streamline Moderne style and completed in 1940. The interior features 27 watercolormural s which were painted from 1941 to 1948 by the Russian immigrant painterAnton Refregier . He was inspired byDiego Rivera . The murals show the history of California.On the outside, the walls are decorated with dolphins.
In the 1980s the building was put up for development by the United States Postal Service. The property was eventually developed by a partnership headed by
Perini Land & Development Company. A new 23-story mixed-use building was added on the south side of the block that contains a new post office, offices, and 320 apartments.More information about the apartments and Rincon Center can be found at the [http://www.rinconneighbors.com Rincon Neighbors] web site.
Two stories were also added atop Underwood's original post office building and a large atrium was cut into the interior. The atrium has a food court on the lower level and balconies connected to office space on the upper levels. The atrium is topped by a convert|200|ft|m|sing=on long skylight and features a distinctive 'Water Column' in the center. The water feature is a continuous convert|85|ft|m|sing=on column of water drops, coming from an eight-foot by eight-foot
acrylic glass box with some 4,000 holes in it placed at the ceiling level. The installation was designed by artist Doug Hollis. The design of the late 1980s mixed-use Rincon Center was led by Scott Johnson of Pereira Associates, the firm founded byWilliam Pereira , designer of theTransamerica Pyramid , the tallest building inSan Francisco .There were many challenges involved in the construction of the
adaptive reuse project. The story of the project's inception and construction was the focus of Douglas Frantz's 1991 book "From the Ground Up".
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